How to Request a Welfare Check in British Columbia
If someone is in immediate danger, call 911.
A welfare check is for when you're worried but it isn't a live emergency. For anything urgent in British Columbia, 911 is always the right call.
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If you can't reach a loved one in British Columbia and you're worried something is wrong, you can ask the police to carry out a welfare check (also called a wellbeing or wellness check). An officer visits the address to confirm the person is safe. Here's exactly how to request one, what to expect, and how to make sure it never comes to this.
How to request a welfare check in British Columbia
- If it's a life-threatening emergency, call 911. If someone may be hurt, unconscious, or in immediate danger, that is an emergency, not a routine welfare check.
- Otherwise, contact the non-emergency line of the local police service or RCMP detachment that covers the address. Search "[their city or area] police non-emergency number" to find it. Ask for a welfare check and explain why you're worried. Do not use 911 for a non-urgent check.
- Give the call handler the details: the person's full name, address, age, a description, why you're concerned, when you last had contact, and any medical conditions or risks in the home.
- Stay reachable. Officers may call you back after they visit.
Most of British Columbia is policed by the RCMP, with municipal forces in cities such as Vancouver and Victoria. Use the local detachment or department's non-emergency line for a welfare check.
In British Columbia, policing is provided by the the RCMP and municipal police departments. For a welfare check you want the team that covers the person's local area, which they can direct you to.
What happens during a welfare check
An officer goes to the address and tries to make contact. If the person answers and is fine, that's the end of it. If nobody answers but there are signs of distress, officers can force entry to help. They may also contact local hospitals or follow up with you afterwards. A welfare check is about safety, not getting anyone in trouble.
When it's about ongoing concern, not a one-off
If your worry is ongoing neglect, self-neglect, or the risk of harm to an older or vulnerable adult rather than a single can't-reach-them moment, adult protection services is often the better route. Contact the local council or health service that covers the person's area and ask about an adult protection services referral. A welfare check is for the urgent moment; safeguarding is for the longer-term risk.
The problem with waiting until you're worried
By the time you're worried enough to call the police, hours or days may already have passed. A welfare check is a last resort. The better answer is a system that notices a missed day automatically and tells the right people straight away, before anyone has to call British Columbia police at all.
Don't forget the pets at home
It's easy to overlook in the moment: if someone lives alone with a pet and can't be reached, that pet may be alone too, with no one who knows it's there or how to care for it. Officers carrying out a welfare check won't know about a cat in a back room or a dog that needs medication unless someone tells them. With AssureOkay, your pet's care details are kept on file, so if a check-in is missed your emergency contacts are told there's a pet at home and exactly how to look after it. You can also build a free pet emergency plan in minutes.
A daily check-in means it never comes to this
AssureOkay sends a gentle daily check-in by app, text, or automated phone call. One tap and your family knows you're okay. Miss it, and your chosen emergency contacts are alerted the same day by push notification, SMS, email, and AI phone call, with your address and any details they need to act fast. No equipment, no contracts, works on any phone.
Worried about someone right now?
Use our free step-by-step guide to find the right number and request a welfare check. Then set up automatic daily check-ins for them, so you're never left guessing again.
What if no one ever had to call the police?
A welfare check means days may already have passed since anyone heard from the person you're worried about. AssureOkay closes that gap: they get a gentle daily check-in, and the moment one is missed, the people who care are told the same day, not whenever someone finally notices the silence.
You can set everything up on their behalf in about five minutes, and it works with whatever phone they already have. No smartphone needed: an AI phone call check-in works on any phone, even a landline.
A daily "I'm okay"
One tap in the app, an SMS reply, a smartwatch, or an AI phone call that works on any phone, even landlines.
Same-day alerts
Miss a check-in and up to 5 emergency contacts are alerted by push, text, email, and phone call.
Details that help
Alerts can include their address and location, so family can act fast or make one informed call.
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Welfare checks in British Columbia: common questions
Welfare checks in other provinces and territories
Prevention beats a welfare check
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